Word: warm
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Bill Meigs accomplished a very rare feat last year. On a Harvard team which had a luke-warm (4-3-1) season, and which drew a minimum of national attention to its games, Meigs was able to earn enough votes to gain a place on the Associated Press All-American second team...
Peron's immature character was revealed in the events leading to the revolution. Hell-bent as he was, the love of a wise, well-educated, warm-hearted grown-up would have been a burden." --Editorial in the Wichita (Kansas) Beacon
After a dinner break, Ed comes back before air time to warm up the new theater audience. Again he leans into a gale of applause. "How are you all?" he asks. "How many are here from out of town?" He recoils from the forest of hands, crying: "Wow! New Yorkers can't even get seats!" He waggles a finger at his people onstage. "Heads will roll." The audience loves it. Ed continues: "Everybody in the audience is honor bound to be happy. So look happy!" They do. "In 30 seconds, Art Hannes is going to introduce...
...help of numerous Radcliffe girls in this project is acknowledged, without whose sporadic help the ways of women would probably have remained a mystery anyway. Investigating sex at Radcliffe is like making Tom Collinses out of warm water and lemon peels, but they're girls--you can't take that away from them.) little murmurs which could be either pure despair, pure pleasure, or any mixture thereof...
...free aerial inspection. Bulganin did little more than rehash previous Soviet disarmament proposals and urge the President to work for them. While the President considered his plan as the beginning of a path to disarmament, Bulganin wanted a Soviet-style disarmament plan to come first. In language as warm as Molotov's smile, Bulganin neither accepted nor rejected the President's proposals...